The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Thai army destroys thousands of landmines in jungle

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Pulling back to a safe distance atop a hill, Thai troops blew up thousands of antiperson­nel landmines yesterday with controlled explosions that sent black plumes of smoke high above jungle treetops.

Thailand is one of more than 160 countries to have signed the Ottawa Treaty, which prohibits the use and stockpilin­g of the destructiv­e weapon and aims to clear all mines by 2025.

As part of a dayslong operation to destroy the rest of Thailand’s stockpile, soldiers clad in protective vests placed stacks of unexploded ordnance in a pit and gingerly laid explosive charges on top.

“From now on, Thailand will no longer retain any more antiperson­nel landmines,” said General Chaichana Nakkerd with the Thai armed forces joint chiefs of staff.

Standing on an observatio­n hill as technician­s detonated the charges, he said 3,133 landmines would be destroyed in Sa Kaeo province to “affirm our stance in not using” them.

But the border between Thailand and Cambodia is still littered with landmines from decades of civil war in Cambodia, where the remnants of the defeated Khmer Rouge retreated in the 1980s.

Chaichana said Thailand, which signed the treaty in 1998, still has a long way to go to clear a 360-kilometre area along the border by its deadline of 2023.

“The problem we still have is... the border with neighbouri­ng countries are in rural areas and on hills,” he said, making them challengin­g to remove.

Local residents who had been maimed by leftover mines were given gifts by the army after watching the operation.

The Ottawa treaty has helped eliminate 51 million landmines over the past two decades since it was enacted in 1997.

But the United States, China, Egypt, India, Israel, Pakistan and Russia have not signed it.

A recent Landmine Monitor report shows that the number of people killed or injured from landmines nearly doubled in 2015 to 6,461 from 3,695 the year before — making it the highest recorded total in a decade. — AFP

 ??  ?? Chaichana (front row, second right) and officials from Japan, Norway and the US oversees soldiers stacking anti-personnel mines during the official Destructio­n Ceremony of Thailand’s Retained Anti-Personnel Mines 2019 event by the Royal Thai Armed Forces in the western Thai province of Sa Kaeo.
Chaichana (front row, second right) and officials from Japan, Norway and the US oversees soldiers stacking anti-personnel mines during the official Destructio­n Ceremony of Thailand’s Retained Anti-Personnel Mines 2019 event by the Royal Thai Armed Forces in the western Thai province of Sa Kaeo.
 ?? — AFP photos ?? Anti-personnel mines blow up during a controlled detonation in the western Thai province of Sa Kaeo.
— AFP photos Anti-personnel mines blow up during a controlled detonation in the western Thai province of Sa Kaeo.

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